Lefteris Papadimitriou
Lefteris Papadimitriou is a Greek composer and performer.
Biography
He was born in Volos, Greece. He studied composition with Iannis Ioannidis and has written many compositions for live instruments and electronic media.
He is a graduate of the Department of Musicology of the University of Athens.
He plays live electronic music with a laptop as his instrument. A live work, entitled “Jollywood”, was based entirely on MIDI sounds.
He is interested in applying electronic techniques to acoustic music and in the exploration of acoustic musical expressiveness in the medium of electronic music.
In 2006, he won the Gaudeamus International Composers Award with his work for piano and orchestra, titled “Black and White”.[1]
He is currently[when?] studying for a PhD in composition at the University of Huddersfield with the support of a scholarship from the Huddersfield contemporary music festival and the Centre of Research in New Music.[citation needed]
References
- ^ "The Gaudeamus Prize 2006: Two Winners". International Association of Music Information Centres. Archived from the original on 2007-02-23. Retrieved 2007-04-02.
External links
- Lefteris Papadimitriou at IMDb
- Interview with Paris Konstantinidis for Classicalmusic.gr (in Greek)
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- Peter Schat (1957)
- Otto Ketting (1958)
- Louis Andriessen (1959)
- Lars Johan Werle (1960)
- Misha Mengelberg, Per Nørgård, and Enrique Raxach (1961)
- Pauline Oliveros (1962)
- Arne Mellnäs (1963)
- Ib Nørholm (1964)
- Joep Straesser and Mario Bertoncini (1965)
- Alfred Janson and Ton Bruynèl (1966)
- Hans-Joachim Hespos, Costin Miereanu, Maurice Benhamou, Jean-Yves Bosseur, Tona Scherchen, and Ralph Lundsten – Leo Nilson (1967)
- Vinko Globokar (1968)
- Jos Kunst (1969)
- Jan Vriend (1970)
- John McGuire (1971)
- Daniel Lentz (1972)
- Maurice Weddington (1973)
- Christian Dethleffsen (1974)
- Robert Saxton (1975)
- Fabio Vacchi (1976)
- Șerban Nichifor (1977)
- Stefan Dragostinov (1978)
- Mauro Cardi (1984)
- Unsuk Chin (1985)
- Uros Rojko (1986)
- Karen Tanaka (1987)
- Michael Jarrell (1988)
- Richard Barrett (1989)
- Claus-Steffen Mahnkopf and Paolo Aralla (1990)
- Asbjørn Schaathun (1991)
- Jörg Birkenkötter (1992)
- David del Puerto (1993)
- Richard Ayres (1994)
- Michael Oesterle and Jesus Torres (1995)
- Régis Campo (1996)
- Hang Zou (1997)
- Kumiko Omura and Geoff Hannan (1998)
- Michel van der Aa (1999)
- Yannis Kyriakides (2000)
- Palle Dahlstedt and Takuya Imahori (2001)
- Valerio Murat (2002)
- Dmitri Kourliandski (2003)
- Sampo Haapamäki (2004)
- Oscar Bianchi (2005)
- Lefteris Papadimitriou and Gabriel Paiuk (2006)
- Christopher Trapani (2007)
- Huck Hodge (2008)
- Ted Hearne (2009)
- Marko Nikodijević (2010)
- Yoshiaki Onishi (2011)
- Konstantin Heuer (2012)
- Tobias Klich (2013)
- Anna Korsun (2014)
- Alexander Khubeev (2015)
- Anthony Vine (2016)
- Aart Strootman (2017)
- Sebastian Hilli (2018)
- Kelley Sheehan (2019)
- Annika Socolofsky (2021)
- Rohan Chander (2022)
- Zara Ali (2023)
This article on a Greek musician is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
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This article about a Greek composer is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
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